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adam 澳洲Southern Star 采访,关于和jake kiss的部分很有意思 Southern Star (one of Melbourne's two gay papers) has Adam on the cover and a great new interview on page 13Southern Star Observer last spoke to Adam Lambert at the start of the year, in the direct aftermath of his brazen November 2009 performance at the American Music Awards, where he kissed a boy (and he liked it) on stage. The horror. By the time Lambert visited Australia a couple of months later, US TV appearances were being cancelled left and right, the reasoning seeming to be that given live air time, Lambert would start dry-humping the nearest male for attention. Almost one year on from the initial fracas, Lambert sounds pleased to have proven the doubters wrong. “I definitely didn’t see the backlash coming as it did. I learned from it, and I’m really proud that I managed to get through it without apologising at any stage, because I don’t think I did anything wrong,” he said, snatching some phone time while visiting Atlanta as part of his Glam Nation tour, which will come to Australia in October. “I think it was really important to focus on the next single right after that, so people understood I wasn’t a one-trick pony. There are all sorts of songs in me, there are all sorts of sides to my personality.” Lambert’s subsequent rise in popularity caught even his Australian tour promoters by surprise: his Aussie dates were hastily moved to bigger venues when he sold out the entire tour in a matter of weeks. It’s not been the case everywhere, though: in the UK, a country seemingly comfortable with flamboyant male pop stars, his releases so far have only scraped into the lower reaches of the charts. But here, his two singles thus far have both been top-five platinum hits. He seems to be following in Pink’s footsteps — popular worldwide, but particularly beloved in Australia (incidentally, his biggest hit to date — the angsty Whataya Want From Me — is a Pink co-write). Lambert has a theory about why Australia seems to ‘get him’. “The culture [in Australia] seems very open, every liberal, very peaceful and positive. Those are things I try to project. As far as people enjoying the music, there’s probably not as much fear of homosexuality down there, so people can just enjoy the music a little easier,” he offered. He even put on a special show for his gay Australian fans earlier this year, performing at the Mardi Gras closing night party. “I was the last act, on at seven in the morning. I think some people had gone home, and the ones who had stayed were… kinda cracked out,” he laughed. “But outside of that, I don’t see that many gay people at my shows, to be honest. The majority of people are women. There’s actually a little bit of self-loathing that happens within the gay community — we have a tendency to eat our own.”
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